Monday, April 20, 2020
Parasitic Wasps Essays - Health, Nutrition, Biomolecules, Biology
  Parasitic Wasps    Malaria is one of the most prevalent and dangerous diseases known to man.    It has existed for centuries and affects a myriad of people in the tropical  region. Even today, with our newly discovered treatments for many of the  tropical diseases, over 10% of the people that are infected with malaria each  year and do not receive proper treatment die. In Africa alone, over 1 million  children die each year because of malaria and new cases are reported frequently.    Malaria is very dangerous and harmful to man. However, the protozoan that causes  malaria has existed since man came into being. Fossils of mosquitoes that are 30  million years old contain the vector for malaria. After written history, many  civilisations have known about malaria. The Greek physician Hippocrates  described the symptoms of malaria in the 5th Century BC The name malaria is  derived from the Italian words, mal and aria, meaning "bad air",  because people of earlier times believed that the disease was caused by polluted  air near swaps and wetlands in Europe. The scientific identification of malaria  was not found until 1880. The French army physician, Charles Laveran, while  stationed in Algeria, noticed strange shapes of red blood cells in certain  patients and identified the disease scientifically and linked to a certain  protozoan. Although the disease had been identified, it was not until 1897, when    British army physician, Ronald Ross studied birds and discovered that the  malarial protozoan was transmitted through mosquitoes. Soon after, two Italian  scientists noted that mosquitoes spread malaria to humans as well. Many attempts  have been made to try to eradicate the disease. As early as 7 AD, in Rome,  swamps were drained to try to prevent the "bad air" from reaching  nearby cities. Recently, in the 1950's and 1960's, about 25 years after the  development of DDT, the United Nations World Health Organisation tried to wipe  out the disease through the use of DDT. Although, the number of cases was  reduces in many areas, they started again. Scientists today believe that malaria  can never be eradicated due to the fact that the protozoan can manipulate easily  and become resistant to a drug that is overused. The mosquitoes that spread  malaria are also becoming resistant to insecticides. Malaria can be treated on  an individual basis and treatments and medicines can be used. To understand  these treatments however, one must understand what happens to a malarial  protozoan. The disease, malaria, is cause by the protozoan, Plasmodium, which  lives in tropical regions all around the world. There are only four species of  this protozoan that cause malaria in humans, Plasmodium ovale, Plasmodium vivax,    Plasmodium malariae, and Plasmodium falciparum. These protozoans are spread from  infected to healthy people through the bite of the Anopheles mosquito, blood  transfusions, or through hypodermic injections. This makes malaria one of the  most easily communicable diseases in the world. 1.Sporozoites in salivary gland.    2.Ocysts  in stomach wall. 3.Male and female gametocytes. 4.Liver phase. 5.Release of  merozoites from liver. These enter red cells where both sexual and asexual  cycles continue. Malaria is spread only through the females of the 60 different  types of the Anopheles mosquito, as the males do not feed on blood. The symptoms  of this disease are many, however a physician must be consulted to avoid risk to  a person. To treat malaria, many drugs are used today. Forms of these drugs date  back to the 1500's and 1600's. Physicians diagnose malaria by identifying    Plasmodia in a patient's body. Once identified, malaria can be treated with  chloroquine and primaquine. Since some forms of Plasmodia falciparum have become  resistant to these, quinine, mefloquine, or halofautrine are used. Almost all of  the cases of malaria can be treated if done in the proper way. However, to  suffer the pain and illness of malaria, people can use many preventive measures.    All swampy areas must be avoided as well as tropical water that may be  contaminated or local food. People should just protect themselves from  mosquitoes and risk of infection will be tremendously lowered. This can be done  by impregnated bednets. These involve surrounding the bed with a curtain that is  sprayed with certain compounds. These are normally pyrethroids or  organophosphates, which create an effective barrier between the mosquito and its  blood meal. Alternative 'barrier' methods are insect repellents. These are  certain chemicals that that when applied to the skin as a spray or lotion is  quite effective at deterring the mosquito from landing on a person in order to  feed. Other methods of controlling malaria are the use of insecticides and  vaccines. Insecticides are chemicals such as    
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